Description essay “Bullfinch” (2nd grade)


Example 1

With the onset of winter, birds begin to have new worries. For wintering birds, the main goal is to stay well fed so they can produce energy and stay warm. But it is very difficult for birds to cope with this, because in winter, unlike in summer, there is snow and ice all around. Finding food becomes much more difficult. Usually, sparrows, crows, and magpies stay for the winter. Anyone can help these birds. We can build feeders for our feathered friends from the simplest materials that everyone has at home: plastic bottles, boxes, milk cartons. But the best and safest solution would be to build a birdhouse made of wood. It is necessary to add food for birds to these feeders: seeds, various cereals and grains, bread. Birds need to be fed constantly. This way we can help them survive the cold winter. We need to protect the birds, take care of them and not disappoint their expectations, because they will count on our feeders. In return, the birds will delight us with their singing and catch various pests. Winter turns out to be a very difficult period for birds. They were much less fortunate than us. So why not help them overcome winter difficulties? After all, it’s not difficult at all!

Several interesting essays

  • Essay What is Respect 9th grade
    “Respect is hard to earn, but easy to lose” - this is the well-known proverb. What is respect? And why from a very early age are we taught to respect ourselves, respect adults, respect society?
  • Features of the language of the comedy Woe from Wit Griboedov artistic features, style of the work
    The comedy play by Alexander Sergeevich Griboedov “Woe from Wit” has multiple stylistic features, the main of which is the verse form.
  • Essay based on Brusilov’s painting Lilacs on the veranda (description)
  • Essay The gap between dream and reality
    A dream, a sweet fruit of our imagination, in which we create an image of what we would like to have, or what we think should happen. In all cases, a dream is a kind of thought, emphasized by positive emotions.
  • Essay about rowan
    The slender, beautiful rowan grows in our forests. It attracts attention at any time of the year. In autumn, the mountain ash turns into a real beauty!

Example 2

Winter is a special time of year when nature freezes and everything seems to die out. There are two types of birds: migratory birds that fly south in winter and birds that remain in their place of residence in winter (non-migratory). Non-migratory birds are birds such as pigeon, sparrow, bullfinch, and tit. Bullfinches are distinguished by their special beauty; they have a red belly and a black back. Migratory birds are birds such as seagull, duck, goose, and stork. We can usually find seagulls near bodies of water and often near the sea. It is very difficult for non-migratory birds to live in winter: they freeze and find almost no food for themselves. People try to feed non-migratory birds: they make feeders from scrap materials, such as bottles or even wood. Non-migratory birds are usually fed with seeds, millet and bread. Birds will also thank a person with kindness - they will kill pests in the garden and garden. When you throw food to the birds, they jump merrily, trying to find a bigger piece for themselves. I think every person on the way to work or school should take bird food with them and pour it into the feeders, so we will do good to nature and animals. Most often, migratory birds sing best, and once winter sets in, you can hear beautiful birdsong.

Essay Birds are our friends

Cold and lack of food drive birds out of the forest. So they rush towards human habitation. There are many feeders on my balcony. In addition to the general bird canteen, where both pigeons and sparrows feed, I set up feeders specifically for tits: I hang empty milk bags with holes cut in them on a harsh thread, and I also use liter and two-liter glass jars. I place twigs in these feeding jars to make it easier for titmice to get food and get out into the wild. The cage is also a convenient feeder. First you need to keep the door open, and when the birds get used to it, gradually close it until there is a small crack of two to two and a half centimeters. I pour sunflower, hemp, pumpkin, and watermelon seeds into the feeders. Tits readily peck margarine, lard and other animal fats. Muscovites, chickadees, and blue tits fly to the balcony. Some tits are already accepting treats from hands. Of course, you need to be patient to tame them. I began to throw their favorite delicacy - mealworms - into the titmouse feeder. Gradually the titmice got used to my presence. And now I’m handing them food on an ordinary student’s ruler, so they take the worm from tweezers. And finally, after two weeks - joy! — the birds completely trusted me. The Muscovy was the first to peck the worm from the palm, then the titmouse. Soon the nuthatch believed in the kindness of human hands. Siskins, goldfinches, and tap dancers also fly to the balcony, but only for a short time. For them, there will always be seeds of birch, alder, spruce, pine, and larch in the forest. And there are also plenty of weeds, the seeds of which they feed on. Bullfinches also visit the balcony. True, it was not possible to lure them with hemp and sunflowers. Then I prepared rowan, hawthorn, viburnum, and barberry. I tied the juicy clusters of these berries together with thin wire and hung them on the balcony when frost set in. Red-breasted bullfinches were the first to arrive. They liked the rowan tree most of all, and I filled an ordinary cage with it to the top. At first, the birds pecked at the rowan trees that protruded from behind the metal rods. Finally, one of the bullfinches finally dared to fly into the cage. Others followed his example. I began putting seeds of flax, ash, maple, lilac, spruce, quinoa, hop, and spirea viburnum into the cage along with rowan, and so gradually switched the birds to a variety of food. Bullfinches most often stay here until mid-March, and sometimes they are found in April . In spring, these red-breasted beauties sing a lot and willingly. They will sit on the ash trees and glorify the coming warmth. From the very dawn their muffled sounds sound: “fu-fu, zyu-zyu!..”. Crested waxwings were also tempted by the berries. A whole flock of people began to visit the balcony. They will swoop in in a noisy group, eat some frozen berries, and then sit somewhere near the balcony on frost-covered trees to rest. And suddenly they break loose - again onto the balcony. And so on all day. You won't find any berries here. Apple trimmings, grated carrots, beets - everything went into use. Even bread soaked in compote or sweet tea was pecked by waxwings. Fieldfare thrushes, of course, are more careful than bullfinches and waxwings; they did not immediately decide to visit the feeder. It all started when I released a semi-tame blackbird into the street. The thrush is accustomed to frost. After all, he did not live in a warm room, but in a small enclosure on the balcony. Once free, the bird did not fly away from its home, and where should it fly? You won't find a more satisfying place. True, sometimes the thrush went away for a while. And then suddenly I noticed how three blackbirds separated from the flock of waxwings. One immediately rushed to the balcony. This was my student. The rest of the birds sat on a birch tree growing nearby. And a few minutes later they flew to the feeder. Sometimes a magpie comes to visit. It is not so easy to lure this long-tailed chirper. Very careful. Various birds fly to the balcony not only in winter, but even in summer and early autumn. By this time I prepare elderberry and white derain for them. I hang a berry bait on strings and watch: no, no, and a warbler, a redstart, a warbler will drop in here... True, they don’t stay here for long. After all, these are mainly migratory birds. Only a nightingale once flew to the feeding trough for two weeks in a row. He really liked mealworms and bloodworms, which I also feed the birds with.

Example 3

Winter is one of the most beautiful times of the year for me. When everything around is covered with a snow-white blanket of snow, and all the trees put on elegant fur coats. Before this season begins, you can see birds flying like crazy across the sky, flying away to warmer climes. They cannot stand the cold, so they fly away to where it is warm and then return. But there are birds that can withstand the cold. Such birds do not fly away anywhere and remain for the winter. This is a very harsh time for birds, but they still stay and wait out the cold. It is not always easy for them to survive the winter, because finding food and shelter is quite difficult for them at such a time. In summer they may eat insects or some plant fruits. In winter they won't be able to find any of this. Such winter birds need human help. So that the birds have something to eat, you can make feeders from scrap materials. Sometimes you should add food to the feeders. Some bread crumbs or grain. And to help birds with housing, you can try and build birdhouses. This is best done with adults. This will help the winter birds a lot! I love making birdhouses and bird feeders. After all, I know that in this way I help them survive the harsh winter season, so that later, in warmer times, they will sing beautifully and help nature!

Cold and lack of food drive birds out of the forest. So they rush towards human habitation. There are many feeders on my balcony. In addition to the general bird canteen, where both pigeons and sparrows feed, I set up feeders specifically for tits: I hang empty milk bags with holes cut in them on a harsh thread, and I also use liter and two-liter glass jars. I place twigs in these feeding jars to make it easier for titmice to get food and get out into the wild. The cage is also a convenient feeder. First you need to keep the door open, and when the birds get used to it, gradually close it until there is a small crack of two to two and a half centimeters. I pour sunflower, hemp, pumpkin, and watermelon seeds into the feeders. Tits readily peck margarine, lard and other animal fats. Muscovites, chickadees, and blue tits fly to the balcony. Some tits are already accepting treats from hands. Of course, you need to be patient to tame them. I began to throw their favorite delicacy - mealworms - into the titmouse feeder. Gradually the titmice got used to my presence. And now I’m handing them food on an ordinary student’s ruler, so they take the worm from tweezers. And finally, after two weeks - joy! — the birds completely trusted me. The Muscovy was the first to peck the worm from the palm, then the titmouse. Soon the nuthatch believed in the kindness of human hands. Siskins, goldfinches, and tap dancers also fly to the balcony, but only for a short time. For them, there will always be seeds of birch, alder, spruce, pine, and larch in the forest. And there are also plenty of weeds, the seeds of which they feed on. Bullfinches also visit the balcony. True, it was not possible to lure them with hemp and sunflowers. Then I prepared rowan, hawthorn, viburnum, and barberry. I tied the juicy clusters of these berries together with thin wire and hung them on the balcony when frost set in. Red-breasted bullfinches were the first to arrive. They liked the rowan tree most of all, and I filled an ordinary cage with it to the top. At first, the birds pecked at the rowan trees that protruded from behind the metal rods. Finally, one of the bullfinches finally dared to fly into the cage. Others followed his example. I began putting seeds of flax, ash, maple, lilac, spruce, quinoa, hop, and spirea viburnum into the cage along with rowan, and so gradually switched the birds to a variety of food. Bullfinches most often stay here until mid-March, and sometimes they are found in April . In spring, these red-breasted beauties sing a lot and willingly. They will sit on the ash trees and glorify the coming warmth. From the very dawn their muffled sounds sound: “fu-fu, zyu-zyu!..”. Crested waxwings were also tempted by the berries. A whole flock of people began to visit the balcony. They will swoop in in a noisy group, eat some frozen berries, and then sit somewhere near the balcony on frost-covered trees to rest. And suddenly they break loose - again onto the balcony. And so on all day. You won't find any berries here. Apple trimmings, grated carrots, beets - everything went into use. Even bread soaked in compote or sweet tea was pecked by waxwings. Fieldfare thrushes, of course, are more careful than bullfinches and waxwings; they did not immediately decide to visit the feeder. It all started when I released a semi-tame blackbird into the street. The thrush is accustomed to frost. After all, he did not live in a warm room, but in a small enclosure on the balcony. Once free, the bird did not fly away from its home, and where should it fly? You won't find a more satisfying place. True, sometimes the thrush went away for a while. And then suddenly I noticed how three blackbirds separated from the flock of waxwings. One immediately rushed to the balcony. This was my student. The rest of the birds sat on a birch tree growing nearby. And a few minutes later they flew to the feeder. Sometimes a magpie comes to visit. It is not so easy to lure this long-tailed chirper. Very careful. Various birds fly to the balcony not only in winter, but even in summer and early autumn. By this time I prepare elderberry and white derain for them. I hang a berry bait on strings and watch: no, no, and a warbler, a redstart, a warbler will drop in here... True, they don’t stay here for long. After all, these are mainly migratory birds. Only a nightingale once flew to the feeding trough for two weeks in a row. He really liked mealworms and bloodworms, which I also feed the birds with.

< PreviousNext >
Rating
( 2 ratings, average 4 out of 5 )
Did you like the article? Share with friends:
For any suggestions regarding the site: [email protected]
Для любых предложений по сайту: [email protected]